Malcolm Cooper

Source: Canberra Times

Malcolm Cooper met Gordon Briscoe, Charles Perkins, Vince Copley
and John Moriarty at St Francis House, run by Father Percy Smith.
All of these men made significant contributions to the struggle for
justice for Aboriginal Australians and to make their contributions
to the wider society as well. Like the others Malcolm was a
successful footballer, playing Aussie Rules for Port Adelaide. In
the 1960s Malcolm helped John Moriarty, Laurie Bryan and others to
establish the Aborigines Progress Association, which became a hub
for Aboriginal activists at that time. Malcolm was a member of the
delegation that met with Prime Minister Robert Menzies in September
1963 to inform him of the living conditions experienced by
Aboriginal people in each state. A Federal Council for Aboriginal
Advancement (FCAA) report of this meeting states that the Prime
Minister 'appeared to be hearing many of these facts for the first
time and undertook to enquire further into the situation,
particularly with regard to the appeal for a referendum to delete
the discriminating sections from the Commonwealth Constitution'.
Malcolm was the South Australian state secretary of the FCAA in
1965.